The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Who killed Edward Okeny?

Portland police ignore a stone-cold mystery
By RICK WORMWOOD  |  December 5, 2007

NEWfeat_okeny_face
Edward Okeny

Media silence
During the 18 days Edward Okeny lay comatose in a hospital bed, the Portland Press Herald did not publish a single word about him. Several people contacted the paper to object.

“I called (columnist) Bill Nemitz and I said that I’m surprised that this guy could die on Friday, and here it was Tuesday and there had been nothing in the paper,” says Bill Slavick, local activist and recent independent candidate for the US Senate. “Portland isn’t Boston or New York. If someone has their head beat in on the streets, that’s news.”

Edward Lakoke, an Okeny family friend and spokesman, echoes that complaint. “We do see a lot of things that happen in different parts of Maine on the news. In Portland, there are very minute things that are always on the news,” Lakoke says, noting his surprise that Okeny’s death went unmentioned.

“My understanding is that it wasn’t something that showed up in our police logs,” Nemitz says, when asked about the delay. “My sense is that was because there were a lot of questions about what actually happened, and that the police weren’t treating it as a definite assault.” Nemitz confirms speaking to Slavick, and fielding complaints about the Press Herald’s inattention, but deferred other questions to the Press Herald’s top editor, Jeannine Guttman, who did not return calls seeking comment.

And when the paper finally acknowledged Edward’s plight (with a 173-word news brief on November 15, followed by a Nemitz column the next day), there was no satisfaction, because the family felt like it only happened because of the complaints. “We called the newspaper,” Edward’s brother Chris Okeny said, “that’s why they came.”
_RW

When members of Portland’s Sudanese community gathered at the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception on November 16 to lay to rest 26-year-old Edward Okeny, the church was filled with more than just their collective grief and the hauntingly beautiful renditions of hymns sung in the harmonic call-and-response style of their homeland. Also in the air and on the tongues of the assembled were some unsettling questions, the answers for which seemed nowhere in sight: What had happened to Okeny, who had been found on the street with an empty wallet and a fractured skull? Had he somehow fallen to his untimely death, or was he murdered?

Compounding these troubling concerns were doubts about the wider community’s interest. The most prominent media coverage of the attack was in the twice-monthly West End News, in a short brief written by police reporter Margery Niblock. The Portland police hadn’t sought help from the public, instead hoping that a grievously injured man would emerge from a coma and explain everything.

Edward Lakoke, an Okeny family friend and spokesman, summed it up at the end of the eulogy: “Eddie left us with more questions than answers.” What happened to him the night of October 20 was — and is — a stone-cold mystery.

1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |   next >
Related: 'Toon time, The best dick on the silver screen, Six story lines to follow, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Medicine, U.S. Senate, Police,  More more >
| More

[ 02/19 ]   Circle Mirror Transformation  @ Theater Project
[ 02/19 ]   Jozef van Wissem + Robbie Lee + Arborea  @ The Oak and The Ax
ARTICLES BY RICK WORMWOOD
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   BLACK BEARS AT FENWAY  |  January 25, 2012
    I had my doubts about Frozen Fenway, the 16-day-long "ice event" held at the venerable old ballpark, starting on New Year's Day.
  •   SMALL POTATOES  |  December 28, 2011
    There are too many ridiculous college football bowl games to really care about unless your alma mater plays in one.
  •   SHOPPING, SIMPLIFIED  |  November 30, 2011
    With the holidays, and their attendant sturm und drang , upon us again, I was thinking about sports news in the context of Thanksgiving.
  •   SF’S NO BOSTON  |  November 02, 2011
    While escaping New England for a few days on the west coast, in the Bay Area, just ahead of all that unexpected October wind and snow, I decided to catch a 49ers game.
  •   GILDING THE TURD  |  October 05, 2011
    The issues surrounding the Cumberland County Civic Center's potential refurbishing remind me of the problems people face when they drive piece-of-shit cars.

 See all articles by: RICK WORMWOOD



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2012 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group